Mental Health Problems and School Outcomes Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Early Adolescents in Norway

被引:0
|
作者
Gil Noam
Brit Oppedal
Thormod Idsoe
Naaila Panjwani
机构
[1] McLean Hospital,Program in Education, Afterschool and Resiliency
[2] Harvard Medical School,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Norwegian Institute of Public Health,Centre for Behavioural Research
[4] University of Stavanger,undefined
[5] Harvard Graduate School of Education,undefined
来源
School Mental Health | 2014年 / 6卷
关键词
School outcomes; Emotional problems; Conduct problems; Immigrant; Early adolescents;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mental health problems in children and adolescents, especially those of immigrant backgrounds, have been of major concern in recent literature. Symptoms of emotional, conduct, or a combination of these problems, furthermore, can impact, and be impacted by, school-related outcomes, such as perceived school stress, classmate support, and teacher support. The present study assessed whether having high levels of such symptoms would predict these school outcomes in 2,248 Norwegian adolescent students between fifth and eighth grades, 51 % of whom were of immigrant background. Seventy-three percent of the immigrant students were second generation. Findings indicate that there are more similarities than differences between immigrant and non-immigrant youth. Immigrant and non-immigrant girls did not differ in prevalence of any symptom category, while immigrant and non-immigrant boys did not differ in conduct problems or comorbid emotional and conduct problems. More immigrant than non-immigrant boys in our sample were in the high-risk group of emotional problems, indicating that this may be a particularly vulnerable group. Our results indicate that disordered symptom groups better explained perceived school stress and classmate support than immigrant status. School stress and low support from classmates were associated with high risk for emotional, conduct, and comorbid problems for all youth, regardless of immigrant status. These findings are encouraging because they indicate that second generation immigrant youth in Norway may not be at greater risk for developing emotional and conduct problems when compared to their non-immigrant peers.
引用
收藏
页码:279 / 293
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mental Health Problems and School Outcomes Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Early Adolescents in Norway
    Noam, Gil
    Oppedal, Brit
    Idsoe, Thormod
    Panjwani, Naaila
    SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH, 2014, 6 (04) : 279 - 293
  • [2] Reactive and Proactive Aggression among Immigrant and Non-Immigrant Early Adolescents in Norway: The Relations to Emotional and Conduct Problems
    Fandrem, Hildegunn
    Oppedal, Brit
    Idsoe, Thormod
    ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 10 (03) : 219 - 230
  • [3] Bullying among immigrant and non-immigrant early adolescents: School-and student-level effects
    Vitoroulis, Irene
    Georgiades, Katholiki
    JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENCE, 2017, 61 : 141 - 151
  • [4] Obstetric and perinatal outcomes among immigrant and non-immigrant women in Berlin, Germany
    David, Matthias
    Borde, Theda
    Brenne, Silke
    Ramsauer, Babett
    Henrich, Wolfgang
    Breckenkamp, Juergen
    Razum, Oliver
    ARCHIVES OF GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS, 2017, 296 (04) : 745 - 762
  • [5] Obstetric and perinatal outcomes among immigrant and non-immigrant women in Berlin, Germany
    Matthias David
    Theda Borde
    Silke Brenne
    Babett Ramsauer
    Wolfgang Henrich
    Jürgen Breckenkamp
    Oliver Razum
    Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 2017, 296 : 745 - 762
  • [6] Psychosocial and behavioral health indicators among immigrant and non-immigrant recent mothers
    Ewesesan, Roheema
    Chartier, Mariette J.
    Nickel, Nathan C.
    Wall-Wieler, Elizabeth
    Urquia, Marcelo L.
    BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH, 2022, 22 (01)
  • [7] Psychosocial and behavioral health indicators among immigrant and non-immigrant recent mothers
    Roheema Ewesesan
    Mariette J. Chartier
    Nathan C. Nickel
    Elizabeth Wall-Wieler
    Marcelo L. Urquia
    BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 22
  • [8] Personality development in immigrant and non-immigrant adolescents: Disruption or maturation?
    Gillespie, Sarah
    Shiner, Rebecca
    Masten, Ann S.
    Motti-Stefanidi, Frosso
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY, 2024, 38 (01) : 53 - 66
  • [9] Traditional postpartum rituals among immigrant and non-immigrant Chinese women
    Dennis, Cindy-Lee
    Brennenstuhl, Sarah
    Brown, Hilary K.
    Grigoriadis, Sophie
    Vigod, Simone N.
    Marini, Flavia C.
    Fung, Kenneth
    TRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY, 2024, 61 (01) : 85 - 94
  • [10] Affordability of and Access to Information About Health Insurance Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Residents After Massachusetts Health Reform
    Kang, Ye Jin
    McCormick, Danny
    Zallman, Leah
    JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH, 2017, 19 (04) : 929 - 938